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Terminal Value Part 21

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"Oh no? You bugged your boss's meetings? I think that would fit the definition of breaking the law. I don't see that being much of a leap to murder. So exactly what were you doing?"

"Protecting myself," Ivan mumbled.

"So it's true. Art didn't know you were making these recordings."

Ivan nodded curtly. "Correct."

"Then perhaps we should inform him!" said Dylan.



Ivan raised an eyebrow. "Frankly, I would prefer you did not." He glanced at Heather. "Of course, I can't stop you, but then again, you can't ask Mr. Williams about these recordings without explaining to him how you came to have this knowledge. Perhaps we are at an impa.s.se on this question. Do you still really want to ask Mr. Williams?"

"Not particularly," said Dylan. This was his chance. It was a complex deal, but he knew he had a strong hand. "But if that's the price of nailing you, I'll just have to pay it. What else have you got?"

"Consider this," Ivan responded. "If my surveillance activities are in any way curtailed, as they surely would be if Mr. Williams found out Miss Carter has seen samples of the videos, he will close ranks with those closest to him, and that will directly affect your ability to find out who killed Tony. And I a.s.sure you it wasn't me."

Heather shook her head. "Why should we believe you?"

Ivan's brow furrowed, and he slumped back against the desk. "I had my suspicions. Ever since Tony's death, the situation screamed murder to me, and I began my own investigation, trying to get what you Americans call 'an angle.' Now-" He pointed a hand at them, almost accusingly. "You now confirm my suspicions. If there's a murderer in the company, I want to find him and get him out of here. I want to prove I had nothing to do with this."

Dylan eyed him closely. An hour before, Ivan had been a suspect. Now, he wondered if someone else was the culprit. But who? "It looks like we all want the same thing."

"So what do we do?" asked Heather, not willing to release Ivan as a suspect.

Dylan nodded. "We'll keep quiet. For now."

Ivan's face reeked of contempt, and also of a chilling amus.e.m.e.nt. "I'll destroy this," he said, picking up the CD and breaking it in half in his hands. "The videos in that archive belong to Mantric, and I can't let you go around hacking into my files. You may have this back." He picked up Heather's briefcase and held it out.

Dylan, sensing Heather's unwillingness to go near Ivan, grabbed it from him. Ivan moved to the door then turned. His face reflected the old unpleasant aloofness for which he was known.

"I'll be in touch," he said, and left. His footsteps echoed down the empty hall.

"You get the files?" whispered Dylan as he watched Ivan disappear in the distance.

Heather put a hand to her pendant. "As much as I had room for."

"Good."

"Dylan."

He looked at her. There was relief in her expression-and anger, too. "What?"

Heather gripped his arm. "You can't trust him!"

Dylan shook his head slowly. "I don't, but I want him to become comfortable, to let down his guard. He pointedly avoided giving me an alibi; he skirted the issue. If he is doing his own investigation, even if he did not kill Tony, he may know who did or have a strong suspicion based on his insights into the people around here. And that may be to our advantage."

Chapter 25.

May 13, 10:00 a.m. New York Dylan and Heather rushed back to the twenty-fifth floor, where they encountered nothing out of the ordinary. They remained silent as they reached the bullpen, and Dylan touched Heather lightly on the elbow, steering her toward his office. To his surprise, she gave him a warning glance and pulled back.

"We need to-" he began.

"Dylan!"

He whirled around, heart in mouth, and saw Rachel hurrying toward him. "What's up?" asked Dylan, trying, with little success, to sound casual.

"Matt needs you. He told me to tear the building down if I had to."

Dylan glanced around and spotted Heather's back, moving in the direction of the lounge. He turned back to Rachel. "Okay."

He gathered himself as he walked across the bullpen. Two weeks earlier, the ebb and flow of the office, his relations.h.i.+ps with his clients and his staff, had been all-important to him. Clutter frustrated him, and now he felt as if he were walking through an alien landscape.

He sat at his desk and logged onto the LAN. Matt was there, waiting. Dylan acted as if nothing had happened, showing the appropriate response to Matt's comments and questions. His head ached throughout the process.

"Hyperfn?" Dylan asked. He seemed to see Matt's face at the far end of a dark tunnel.

"Yeah. Everyone's worked like a dog on this-through the weekend and non-stop yesterday. Christ, I think we turned over every stone, pulled in every favor everyone on the team had. They know what's at stake."

Dylan's mind mult.i.tasked as it wandered back to Heather and why she had walked away from him. Was she all right? What had happened with Ivan before he had shown up? "And?" he asked Matt.

"And it's paid off." Matt lowered his voice.

Dylan's blood began to pump. He leaned in toward Matt and lowered his voice. "Okay. Good. How?"

"You know how when we write code for our clients, there are embedded comments most people can't read? Stuff for the techies in case there was some kind of a glitch or something?"

"Uh-huh." Dylan waited for more.

"Well, as you know, we always put tags in the source code, tags that make it clear who wrote it and who's licensed to use it. To protect the client. And us."

"And?"

"And," Matt said in a soft voice, "well, I kind of hacked into LC's site."

Dylan shoved back from the desk quickly. "You did what? Jesus, Matt! How exactly did you get your hands on script from LC?"

"Actually a lot of it is sitting right there on their website. All you need to do is fire up your browser and view the source. But the important stuff-" Matt ran a hand across his bristled chin. "Well, I told you the part about calling in favors."

"I see." Indeed he did see. It suddenly dawned on Dylan that he had crossed over to the dark side himself by sending Heather in to hack the Mantric files. Now here he was feigning dismay at how Matt had stolen a compet.i.tor's intellectual property. But it was way too late to go back. "So why the h.e.l.l didn't you look for these tags in the first place?"

"We did. Every piece of code, every page of script. We ran searches for every single tag that would possibly identify Mantric or Hyperfn."

"So that's how you figured it out?"

"No. We didn't find a thing." Matt's voice broke, and he laughed a little. "Then last night, when I was almost asleep sitting at my desk, it dawned on me. We started working on Hyperfn long before we ever came to Mantric."

"Jesus," whispered Dylan. He sat back in his chair and realized Matt had gone back to the old MobiCelus tags and tried them instead.

Matt nodded in silent agreement. "Yeah. So I came in early and ran the searches again. And what do you know?" He choked. His hands shook. "Hey, presto! The stupid code on a simple end-user log-in error page was riddled with fragments of MobiCelus tags-tags we wrote to protect Hyperfn. Man. I should have thought of that sooner." He laughed, then coughed. "They should have, too."

"Take it easy, Matt."

Matt grimaced. "Not possible. You do understand what this means, don't you? Someone from Mantric sold us out to-"

"Hey!" said Dylan sharply. "It doesn't mean that at all. Some hotshot at LC could have stolen the code themselves, or someone at Hyperfn could have s.n.a.t.c.hed it."

"That's very rea.s.suring," said Matt sarcastically. "This is a bombsh.e.l.l."

"Just let me think a minute." Bombsh.e.l.l indeed. LC had not magically beaten Hyperfn to the punch, and it didn't look like an inside job at Hyperfn, either. Someone at Mantric had taken the Hyperfn business and given it to LC, probably for a considerable amount of money. But what good did that do? They still could not actually prove Mantric was responsible for the theft. It might even be someone in his own division. "f.u.c.k," he breathed softly.

"Exactly." Matt slumped back in his chair, looking dazed and defeated.

What a time for this to happen! Dylan's mind tore through multiple options. A year ago, he would not have hesitated to bring the staff together, along with Rob and Heather and Tony. They would brainstorm for an hour and come up with the best way to find out whoever had done this, no matter what the cost. But now, what if he made the accusation but couldn't prove it? Wouldn't he simply be giving Art an excuse to fire him? No, he needed hard proof. Otherwise he would be out with nothing but the s.h.i.+rt on his back, and Tony's murderer would never be found.

"Dylan, I think it's probably best if I resign."

"No, you're not going to do that. We're not done yet. And we're not going to mention this to anyone, either."

Matt's eyes widened. "You're kidding?"

"First we need to find out whether it was a sell-out or a theft. Who else knows about this?"

"You and me."

"Okay. Then keep it to yourself. Of course, I'll report it to Art when I absolutely have to, but I want that to be when we know for sure what happened. If this gets out now, it only hurts us. Plus it would make it harder to find out the truth. Okay?"

Matt drew a hand across his mouth as if to wipe away his surprise. "Okay. But what do I do?"

"You need to focus on personal connections between the MobiCelus employees who had access to the Hyperfn project and LC. Don't tell anyone what you're doing."

"Except Rob-right?"

"Of course. We need to be sure no one is overlooked. Rob has a lot on his plate and could use the help."

"OK." Matt pulled himself up as if standing at attention.

"Good. Call me if you find out anything. And, Matt, do whatever you have to do, but remember, do it quietly. Good luck."

"Thanks, boss."

"Don't thank me. We still have to figure this out."

Dylan hung up and began reorganizing his thoughts, allowing the memory of Ivan to flow back into his mind like a tide encroaching on an open beach. He had a swift image of Heather standing tall and beautiful, a look of angry triumph on her face and one hand clenched around the flash pendant. He pulled out his cell phone.

"Heather," he said when she answered. "You okay?"

"Sure." Her short, curt answer troubled him.

"I was worried. I was afraid you might be-"

"Listen, Dylan, I'm pretty busy. I'm on my way out the door to catch a shuttle back to Boston, and I really don't want to talk to you. Do you understand?"

"What? But-"

"I said I was fine. Just because we work together doesn't mean you have to check up on me. Okay?"

He hesitated. "Okay."

"Good." She hung up.

Dylan stared at his phone. Call time: twenty-two seconds. What the h.e.l.l was going on? Then he had a thought. What an idiot he was! Was there someone in her office? Someone she didn't want to know what they had found or that they were working together? Could someone have been listening to their conversation? Was that why she reacted that way?

He considered racing out the door to fly back to Boston with her, but he needed to be alone for a while to think, to take time to unclutter his mind and put everything in perspective. He picked up a sponge basketball and threw it at a small hoop mounted on the back of his door. He repeated this activity with precision, all the while opening each file in his mind, reorganizing it, and, when satisfied with the process, going on to the next file. He continued to throw the ball at the hoop, but several of the files would not cooperate-the Hyperfn file, Tony's murder, and his position in Mantric.

His mind refused to be of a.s.sistance. He feared discovering that, by joining Mantric, he had become party to a colossal fraud, and he feared he would never find out the truth about Tony. He put the ball away and punched "three" on his keyboard.

Rob answered after four rings, "Hi, Dylan, what's up?"

"I just wanted to alert you I've asked Matt to help you look through the LC-related files."

"Yeah, he's already stopped by."

"Good. Is he there?"

"h.e.l.l no. I sent him home for some sleep. He's a wreck."

"Okay. Well, I just wanted you to know. When he comes back in, you and he should double-check each other's work."

"Right. We'll get on it as soon as possible."

"You haven't found anything?"

Rob laughed. "Do you think I'd be sitting here if I had?"

May 13, 7:05 p.m. Boston Dylan finally caught the five-thirty shuttle back to Boston, and he arrived home still feeling unsettled and directionless, still trying to figure out what was up with Heather. He slid the knot of his tie down and slipped it over his head. He took off his sweaty s.h.i.+rt, removed his belt, and was kicking off his shoes when the doorbell rang. In another life, he might have let it ring. But this was not another life, so he wandered over to the front door. It might be Matt, with news about the Hyperfn fiasco. Or it might be. . . .

He yanked open the door. "Heather!"

She gave him a quick kiss that only partly allayed his fears. "Did you just get in?"

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